Portion distortion: Nuts

Nuts are a nutrient-packed snack. What’s the ideal daily number for you to munch on?

Do you reach for a handful of nuts for a snack? Unsalted nuts, whether raw or roasted, can be a high-protein snack packed with healthy fats and phytonutrients.

Just 28g of nuts daily has been found to reduce the risk of coronary heart disease. For people at risk of developing heart disease, the cholesterol-lowering portfolio diet includes 42g of nuts daily and the DA SH diet, for blood pressure reduction, recommends 50g nuts daily.

Snacking on nuts can be a really healthy choice compared with muffins, biscuits and chips, but it can be easy for our portion size to be larger than we think. Although nuts contain healthy polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats, vitamins and other phytonutrients, they also are high in energy.

Mindlessly nibbling on nuts means we can eat more than we think. This isn’t helped by the fact nuts are often sold in large bags. So, while nuts are a healthy snack, too many can fill you with excess energy.

Recommended portion size

To keep it simple, it’s often recommended we have a 30g serve of nuts as a snack. That’s a little less than a ¼ cup, or a small handful. 30g of almonds: 750kJ, 6g protein, 16g fat, 1g sat fat, 2g carbs, 3.5g fibre